ale

[eyl] /eɪl/
noun
1.
a malt beverage, darker, heavier, and more bitter than beer, containing about 6 percent alcohol by volume.
2.
British, beer.
Origin
before 950; Middle English; Old English (e)alu (genitive ealoth); cognate with Old Saxon alo-, Middle Dutch ale, ael, Old Norse ǫl; Lithuanian alùs, OCS olŭ; Finnish, Estonian olut; areal word of North Europe
Can be confused
ale, ail, awl.

A.L.E.

Insurance.
1.
additional living expense.
Examples from the web for ale
  • For centuries, trading in wool, ale, cakes and cheese created wealth for the town.
  • Casks used for ale or beer have shives, spiles and keystones in their openings.
  • However, lager production results in a cleaner tasting, drier and lighter beer than ale.
British Dictionary definitions for ale

ale

/eɪl/
noun
1.
a beer fermented in an open vessel using yeasts that rise to the top of the brew Compare beer, lager1
2.
(formerly) an alcoholic drink made by fermenting a cereal, esp barley, but differing from beer by being unflavoured by hops
3.
(mainly Brit) another word for beer
Word Origin
Old English alu, ealu; related to Old Norse öl, Old Saxon alofat
Word Origin and History for ale
n.

Old English ealu "ale, beer," from Proto-Germanic *aluth- (cf. Old Saxon alo, Old Norse öl), perhaps from PIE root meaning "bitter" (cf. Latin alumen "alum"), or from PIE *alu-t "ale," from root *alu-, which has connotations of "sorcery, magic, possession, intoxication." The word was borrowed from Germanic into Lithuanian (alus) and Old Church Slavonic (olu).

In the fifteenth century, and until the seventeenth, ale stood for the unhopped fermented malt liquor which had long been the native drink of these islands. Beer was the hopped malt liquor introduced from the Low Countires in the fifteenth century and popular first of all in the towns. By the eighteenth century, however, all malt liquor was hopped and there had been a silent mutation in the meaning of the two terms. For a time the terms became synonymous, in fact, but local habits of nomenclature still continued to perpetuate what had been a real difference: 'beer' was the malt liquor which tended to be found in towns, 'ale' was the term in general use in the country districts. [Peter Mathias, "The Brewing Industry in England," Cambridge University Press, 1959]
Meaning "festival or merry-meeting at which much ale was drunk" was in Old English (see bridal).

Related Abbreviations for ale

ALE

additional living expense